Gabby Young

gabby-young

Since the soft release of their stunning debut album, We’re All In This Together, in 2009, on her own Gift of the Gab label, Gabby Young and Other Animals have taken off in a big way. The eight-piece have spent 2010 touring, playing lots of festivals, including Glastonbury, as well as scores of smaller shows around the UK and Europe. Gabby is a great show-woman, which, coupled with an amazing voice, is a winning combination.   After building up a loyal fanbase of music lovers and those of sartorial discernment alike, the album has recently been given a re-release and 2011 is sure to be hers for the taking.   In this special Christmas podcast, which was first broadcast on 16 December 2010, we learn that Gabby really loves Christmas. And I mean really *really* loves Christmas. She chooses three of her favourite Christmas songs and tells us about her amazing year.

Play Now

Download it

www.gabbyyoungandotheranimals.com

Adrian’s Twitter: @adriandcr

Adam’s 4th Day of Christmas

 918_2

The first of my ‘Words into Wires’ Xmas specials has three tracks that come together after being recorded twenty years apart from each other.
We start off with Procol Harum in 1967, then on to Run DMC in 1987 and finishing up with the Magnetic Fields right here in 2010.
They don’t especially make you feel all festive inside but are well on the way to getting you there and far away from bloody Slade too !

Play Now

Download it
1. Procol Harum – A Christmas Camel
2. Run DMC – Christmas In Hollis
3. The Magnetic Fields – Everything Is One Big Christmas Tree

Bleeding Heart Narrative at Union Chapel

union chapel

12th December 2010

Saturday took me to the marvelous theatre that is The Union Chapel, Islington. I’d been keen to visit this venue after hearing how special it was and it is indeed a treat, it’s great to see a church being used for something and not just gathering dust, we’ve a wealth of these spaces in London and frankly most of them are wasting space, once built  for occasions of joy and hoards of people but as religion went out of fashion so did it’s home, fortuanetly The Union Chapel have decided to use this awesome octagonal space for what it’s designed for, being filled with noise.  The band responsible on Saturday were Bleeding Heart Narrative. We’re already fans of BHN here at DCR but Saturday reminded us why, with a backbone of 7 musicians, mostly strings, they’re perfect. They fill the space with waves of cello, violin and electric strings backed up by layers of vocals from the whole band, the latter half of the performance saw the band joined by an additional four string players which only added to the atmosphere. Highlights were new single ‘Perun’ and the room filler ‘David Foster Wallace’. You can listen here.

Union Chapel do lots of free gigs as well as gigs you get your wallet out for, they also run regular church services and act as a homeless centre. You can check them out here.

Digby’s 3rd Day of Christmas

diggers

For the first of my 13 Days of Christmas
podcasts I’m taking a look at the flipside to some of the UK’s
Christmas number one singles. Even though the songs that were number
one sold in their millions and are now seen as classics some of their
b-sides were still quite unusual. This show features three of the most
interesting b-sides, including synthpop from the Human League about the
assassination of JFK, ambient prog from Pink Floyd and The Beatles’
surrealist pop.

Play Now

Download it

Liam & Gem’s 2nd Day of Christmas

 

me gemma

Play Now

Download it

This first of two shows from Liam & Gemma  features Gemma’s choice of festive music. She opens up with a beautiful track from Sufjan Stevens which ticks all the yuletide boxes in terms of title, lyrics and content and that’s followed by a classic from The Walkmen’s album Bows and Arrows, the show closes with the on trend ‘Allo Darlin’. We hope you enjoy the show. Their other show is on the 20th and features Liam’s music, it promises to be a little more leftfield in terms of Christmas connections.

Alessi’s Ark


Alessi

photo: Rebecca Miller

Play Now

Download it

Alessi Laurent-Marke records under the name Alessi’s Ark. Since her first release, the Bedroom Bound EP, in 2007, she has released a well-received album, Notes From the Treehouse, on EMI, and, in 2010, following a move to Bella Union, the home of Fleet Foxes, John Grant and Midlake, she released the Soul Proprietor EP.   Her latest album, Time Travel, is released by Bella Union on 25 April 2011. She has toured with the likes of Laura Marling, Villagers and Sons of Noel and Adrian.

In this special podcast for Different Class Radio, which was first broadcast on 12 December 2010, Alessi tells Adrian Arratoon about Christmas when she was growing up, appearing in radical nativity plays, her highlights of 2010 and chooses three of her favourite festive tracks.   www.alessisark.com

www.bellaunion.com

Adrian Arratoon Twitter: @adriandcr

Dark Dark Dark

darkdarkdark

I was first introduced to this Minneapolis quintet through the wonderful Tom Ravenscroft on his radio show, but they get plenty of kudos at the moment.

My route in was the sublime track Daydreaming which you can hear below, but the recently released longplayer WILD GO on Supply and Demand has plenty to offer apart from this, singer Nona Marie Invie’s vocals are as naked as the enticing front cover of the LP but that’s not where it ends the album is of classic folk and pure,  I’m not a folk fan.

They play The Lexington in London on Tuesday (30th Nov) with a live recording later to be featured on 6 music, which I believe is a tie in again with Mr Ravenscroft.

Liam & Gem feature them in their recent show here

Review: John Grant. Queen Elizabeth Hall, London

11 November 2010

by Adrian Arratoon

JOHN-495x0

There have been fewer more heartening things in music this year than the return and resurgence of singer John Grant.

The Czars, his previous band, were lauded critically but, almost inevitably, failed to find favour outside of a small coterie of admirers. Five years ago, at one of the final shows before his previous group fell apart, at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, Grant came on stage to a three-quarter-full house. “I want to thank you all for not going to see Beck tonight,” he deadpanned, as the latter was playing to sell-out crowds at the Apollo up the road. But in the joke lay the bitter reality of singing your heart out to a non-appreciative world.

Here was someone whose gorgeous baritone could surely make aeroplanes fall from the skies, make the leaves fall from the trees, and make you believe that if you had his voice, if only for a few hours, your life would be much, much better.

But crippled with self-doubt, drug addiction and a legacy of growing up gay in a hostile America, Grant all but disappeared as a musical force for a few years, save the odd guest appearance with the likes of Piano Magic.

Fast-forward to the present, and his date at the Purcell Room on London’s South Bank, has been upgraded to the altogether more impressive QEH. It’s practically a sell-out. And the wave of love that hits him from the audience is palpable. Buoyed by the support of labelmates Midlake playing on Queen of Denmark, his revelatory, cathartic album of this year, the John Grant of 2010 seems a much more confident man. With only a violinist, Fiona Brice, and Midlake keyboardist Jesse Chandler playing with him, theshwo would be carried by Grant’s new-found brio and, damn it, showmanship. We’re not talking Sammy Davis Junior but today’s John Grant knows how to engage an audience.

Introducing Where Dreams Go To Die, he quips: “This is dedicated to the Travelodge in King’s Cross.” Most of the songs, the majority of which are culled from the album, are preceded by amusing introductions. For JC Hates Faggots, he talks about having been asked to make a video for an organisation that tells youngsters that things will get better when they grow up. But he’s been putting it off: “It does get better, but not much.”

But all this would be nothing were the music, and his voice, not so simply stunning. Stripped down from the record’s layers, these songs fly, and his voice, an amazing deep velvet baritone, makes tears form. Caramel is near unbearable in its gentle force, Chicken Bones transcends the tale of a Thanksgiving from Hell that precedes it. And, finally there’s an encore from heaven; The Czars classic Paint the Moon and their cover of Connie Francis’s Where the Boys Are, backed tentatively by guests The Smoke Fairies, are concrete proof that here is an artist whose return from obscurity means that there is hope for us all, that good things do happen.

A triumph. Nothing less.

John Grant will be returning to the UK for an extensive tour in 2011.

For details, please see here.

Vital Sound Reggae

daniel reggaePlay Now

Download it

Tracklist shortly……..

A bit about the show

I have been into music since I was a small child growing up in Colchester, Essex. The first record I bought was the theme to Monkey Magic in 1981 when i was six. Early music memories involve me and my brother  taping our favourite songs off the top 40 on a Sunday afternoon, and also on the family holidays my dad had a Specials album, a Bob Marley album and a Ska greatest Hits album and they were on rotation in the car when we went on holiday so I think that is where I got an early ear for reggae music.

 
As I got older I got into hip hop and especially UK hip hop like London Posse, also the rave scene was obviously massive in Essex so that had a big influence on me and dub music was always part of the soundtrack round someones house while chilling. I heard Jah Shaka play in 1993 and that changed my musical life – never before had I felt the raw power of music and i knew from then on that reggae was my thing. I love drum and bass too and was lucky enough to be in the right place in London to be a Blue Note soldier when Metalheadz was ruling hoxton square in 1995.
 
This show will focus mainly on reggae but will cover all styles and occasionaly I’ll dip into the rest of my collection to draw some classics from other genres.
Daniel

Lilian Hak

Lilian Hak‘s third album, Old Powder New Guns is a revelation. The Dutch artist has moved away from laptop electronica, hired a huge band and made a stunning set of joyful songs with filmic, jazzy influences.

Just before the release of the album she spoke to Adrian Arratoon on You and the Night and the Music. This interview was first broadcast on 13 September 2010.

lilian

Play Now
Download it